ColorForth
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- The correct title of this article is colorForth. The initial letter is shown capitalized due to technical restrictions.
colorForth is a programming language from the Forth programming language's original designer, Chuck Moore, developed in the late 1990s.
An idiosyncratic programming environment, the colors simplify Forth's semantics, speed compilation, and are said to aid Chuck's own poor eyesight: colorForth uses different colors in its source code (replacing some of the punctuation in Forth) to determine how different words are treated.
colorForth was originally developed as the scripting language for Chuck's own homebrew VLSI CAD program OKAD, with which he develops custom Forth processors. As the language gained utility, he rewrote his CAD program in it, spruced up the environment, and released it to the public. It has since gained a small following, spurred much debate in the Forth community, and sprung offshoots for other processors and operating environments. The language's roots are closer to the Forth machine languages Chuck develops for his processors than to the mainstream standardized Forths in more widespread use.
The language comes with its own tiny (63K) operating system. Practically everything is stored as source code and compiled as and when required. The current colorForth environment is limited to running on Pentium based PCs with limited support for lowest-common-denominator motherboards, AGP video, disk, and network hardware.
The coloring of the name "colorForth" is not gratuitous. It is how the author spells the language on his web pages, and serves as a short usage example. Red words start a definition and green words are compiled into the current definition. Thus, colorForth would be rendered in standard Forth as:
: color forth ;
Moore developed Forth in the early 1970s and created a series of implementations of the language. In the 1980s he diverged from (or rather ignored) the standardization of the language, instead continuing to evolve it. He developed a series of Forth-like languages, each fairly extreme in its simplicify: Machine Forth, OK, colorForth.
There is some controversy about colorForth marginalizing color blind programmers, but Moore has stated that color is only one option for displaying the language. One of Moore's papers on colorForth was printed in black and white, but used italics and other typographical conventions to present source code.
[edit] External links
- http://www.colorforth.com/
- colorForth mailing list archive
- Machine Forth and Color Forth
- www.inventio.co.uk/cfdos.htm - colorForth downloader / source reader
- more colorForth links
- the Color Forth wiki